Business Travel News

Global airline traffic grew nearly 12 percent in May over the same month in 2009, bringing passenger levels modestly above those last seen before the recession hit in 2008.

"Demand rebounded strongly in May, following the impact of the European volcanic ash fiasco in April," IATA director general and CEO Giovanni Bisignani said in a statement. "Passenger traffic is now 1 percent above pre-recession levels.”

Carriers from all regions witnessed demand gains in May, though IATA recorded particular strength among Latin American carriers with nearly 24 percent growth, Asia-Pacific carriers with 13 percent growth and Middle Eastern carriers with nearly 18 percent growth.

As has been the case since the recovery began to take hold among airlines, European carriers recorded what IATA called "the weakest growth," posting an 8 percent traffic growth rate in May from the same month in 2009. "Weak economic growth, questions over financial stability and sharply tightening fiscal policies will likely result in continued slower demand growth than is experienced in other parts of the world," IATA said of the region.

North American airlines, meanwhile, saw nearly an 11 percent increase in passenger traffic in May compared with May 2009, IATA reported.

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus